More actions
Basic information
Display title | File talk:ColonialBanner.png |
Default sort key | ColonialBanner.png |
Page length (in bytes) | 3,342 |
Namespace ID | 7 |
Namespace | File_talk |
Page ID | 10500 |
Page content language | en - English |
Page content model | wikitext |
Indexing by robots | Allowed |
Number of redirects to this page | 1 |
Page protection
Edit | Allow all users (infinite) |
Move | Allow all users (infinite) |
Edit history
Page creator | Scotchfairy (talk | contribs) |
Date of page creation | 14:57, 4 August 2006 |
Latest editor | Mercifull (talk | contribs) |
Date of latest edit | 09:47, 10 August 2006 |
Total number of edits | 10 |
Recent number of edits (within past 90 days) | 0 |
Recent number of distinct authors | 0 |
SEO properties
Description | Content |
Article description: (description )This attribute controls the content of the description and og:description elements. | Viewing the image at full size shows the image uploaded unmangled. What was foxing me was the thumbnail version that the upload page shows you. That is definitely not rendering correctly. The circular gradient in the center of the seal is missing for some unknown reason. Folks, this is why real artists don't use orphan formats like SVG... There's no good program to directly edit them (and no, Inkblot isn't that good a choice either. It appears to have been written by geeks rather than artists from what I've seen of it's user interface.) The only browser support is through Adobe's badly-outdated plugin (which won't display SVG files that Adobe Illustrator outputs, doesn't that fill you with confidence?). Though Mozilla says they'll have native support working Real Soon Now. Even the WikiCommons group is still pretty heavily divided on this issue because the format is so poorly supported. The biggest argument for it has been MediaWiki's internal SVG rendering engine. The fact that it can't seem to scale drawings correctly doesn't fill me with confidence. I know the drawings and icons I've done for Wikipedia were all in PNG format (and some of them were in the last month or so). |